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‘Ironman’-like robotic suits could give workers super strength and help them lift heavy objects

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activelink exoskeleton

Move over, Tony Stark — factory workers may soon be wearing robotic suits that help them lift and carry heavy objects.

Electronics giant Panasonic recently announced it will begin selling these "exoskeletons," which were developed in collaboration with the company ActiveLink, MIT Technology Review reported.

"We expect that exoskeletons, or power-assist suits, will be widely used in people's lives in 15 years," said Panasonic spokesperson Mio Yamanaka, who is based in Osaka, Japan, as quoted by Tech Review.

The suit, which weighs just over 13 pounds and attaches to the back, thighs, and feet, allows its wearer to carry an additional 33 pounds. The device has undergone testing with warehouse handlers in Osaka, and is being tested now by forestry workers.

Powered exoskeletons, wearable mechanical frames powered by a system of motors, are increasingly making their way into the market, from helping people with lower limb disabilities walk again, to outfitting troops with armor that gives them super strength and perception. Now, these devices are starting to play a role in manual labor, too. And they could be especially helpful for older workers.

The Panasonic suit contains force sensors that detect when the wearer is trying to lift or carry a heavy object, and a lightweight carbon-fiber motor that amplifies their motions and gives their muscles extra oomph. The company is also testing a much larger suit that could help workers carry up to 220 pounds, according to Tech Review.

activelink exoskeleton

Panasonic isn't the only company working on exoskeletons for industrial use. Cyberdyne, another Japanese company, sells suits that use nerve signals to detect how the wearer aims to move before applying force to assist with the movement. Cyberdyne recently partnered with Tokyo's Haneda Airport to provide it with exoskeletons that can help airport staff schlep heavy luggage.

Meanwhile, Ekso Bionics, headquartered in Richmond, California, is developing an industrial exoskeleton that helps the wearer lift heavy power tools. Ekso also has a suit designed to help people with weakness in their lower extremities stand up and walk naturally. In addition, the US military has contracted Ekso to develop its armored TALOS exoskeleton to protect soldiers on the battlefield.

The ReWalk exoskeleton, from a company called ReWalk Robotics, has produced the first powered exoskeleton to be approved by the FDA. The device helps people with spinal cord injuries that affect their lower limbs stand upright, walk, and even, in some cases, climb stairs.

Join the conversation about this story »

NOW WATCH: This MIT robot competing at the DARPA Challenge can use a drill, open doors and even see


A man who's been paralyzed since 2010 told us what it was like to take steps again thanks to a revolutionary device

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mark pollock steps

Mark Pollock injured his spinal cord in 2010 after falling from a second-story window. The accident left him unable to move from the waist down.

But Pollock, an adventurer from Northern Ireland, has recently taken his first few strides since the accident.

He did it with the aid of a bionic suit and a jolt of electrical stimulation delivered to his spine through his skin, scientists reported earlier this month.

The feat makes Pollack the first person with complete paralysis — meaning he has no movement or feeling below the level of his injury — to walk inside a robotic "exoskeleton" while receiving noninvasive spinal stimulation, according to scientists from UCLA, who presented the findings at a recent conference.

Pollock, who has been blind since the age of 22, has used a wheelchair since his accident.

"Compared to sitting in the wheelchair, standing in the exoskeleton is incredible in itself," Pollock told Business Insider. "But standing and walking with the [spinal] stimulation is like moving from a standard vehicle into the sports version. It felt like my legs were coming alive." 

Of course, the study only involved one person, and we're still a long way from finding a cure for paralysis, experts say, because once damaged, the nervous system is very difficult to repair.

"This is really exciting," Grace Peng, a program director at the National Institute of Biomedical Imaging and Bioengineering, which funded the research, told Business Insider. But it "definitely needs a lot more data to convince people" that the therapy is effective, she said.

As this video shows, the stimulation enabled to Pollock voluntarily move his legs, as the exoskeleton provided the support needed to complete each step.

Breaking down barriers

This isn't the first obstacle Pollock has faced. When he was five years old, he lost his vision in one eye, and when he was 22, he lost it in his other eye, leaving him totally blind. But that didn't stop Pollock, an avid athlete, from going on to become the first blind person to race to the South Pole ten years later.

Then, in 2010, just weeks before his wedding, Pollock fell. The accident caused him to permanently lose all movement and feeling from the waist down.

He and his fiancée, Simone George, joined the Christopher & Dana Reeve Foundation to support research on paralysis. Through that organization, he met V. Reggie Edgerton, an exercise physiologist at UCLA who was researching treatments for spinal cord injury.

Pollock had been using an exoskeleton — a powered device that supports its wearer — built by Richmond, California-based company Ekso Bionics, and Edgerton had been working on developing a non-surgical electrical stimulation therapy for spinal cord injury. Could they combine these two approaches to get even better results, Pollock and Edgerton wondered? 

In search of a treatment

Edgerton has spent the last three decades working on treatments for paralysis, including various combinations of drugs and electrical stimulation.

In a study last year, Edgerton and his colleagues, Susan Harkema and Claudia Angeli of the University of Louisville, Kentucky, showed that four paralyzed men who'd gotten electrical implants in their spinal cords regained the ability to partially move their legs.

In July, Edgerton and colleagues did a study using a type of noninvasive spinal stimulation through the skin, showing that five men who were completely paralyzed were able to move their legs while lying down.

mark pollock rising

In the current study, he decided to give Pollock this noninvasive stimulation while Pollock was in the robotic exoskeleton. The way the suit works is by providing support while a person tries to move and completing the motions as needed.

Pollock trained for five days in the suit with the aid of electrical stimulation, and was able to take thousands of steps, the researchers said. While the stimulator was on, Pollock said he felt a sensation of "tingling" and "tension" in his legs, which haven't felt anything for years, possibly because the stimulation activated remnants of nerves near his spinal injury. He also felt improvement in other bodily functions, like increased heart rate and the ability to sweat — both signs of healthy nerve activity.

The researchers think this type of combination therapy could be used to help people with either complete or partial paralysis regain some mobility, Edgerton told Business Insider. The question is, "how much improvement can be realized with a person like this?" he said. "That, we don't know."

Meanwhile, Edgerton has started a company called NeuroRecovery Technologies to develop these stimulators commercially.

As for Pollock, the experience of having the stimulation in the exoskeleton provided a "glimmer of hope" despite his limited prospects for recovery. "But of course, at the end of the study, you have to roll out in a wheelchair with no stimulator," he said.

Still, the study adds to a growing body of research on spinal cord injury that provides some measure of optimism in a field where progress has been frustratingly slow. Pollock has a trust dedicated to the search for a cure for paralysis.

During his trip to the South Pole, Pollock followed in the footsteps of British explorer Robert Falcon Scott and Norwegian explorer Roald Amundsen. But in the past few years, he has traveled the world and met people who are explorers in another sense — scientists. "I have the same feeling as when I prepared and went to the South Pole," he said, only "in a different domain."

The study was published in the Proceedings of 37th Annual International Conference of the IEEE Engineering in Medicine and Biology Society.

Join the conversation about this story »

NOW WATCH: These bionic suits are changing the lives of people who never thought they'd walk again

This man hiked to the South Pole first when blind and took steps again after becoming paralyzed — here's how he did it

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mark pollock steps

Mark Pollock injured his spinal cord in 2010 after falling from a second-story window. The accident left him unable to move from the waist down.

But Pollock, an adventurer from Northern Ireland, has recently taken his first few strides since the accident.

He did it with the aid of a bionic suit and a jolt of electrical stimulation delivered to his spine through his skin, scientists reported earlier this month.

The feat makes Pollack the first person with complete paralysis — meaning he has no movement or feeling below the level of his injury — to walk inside a robotic "exoskeleton" while receiving noninvasive spinal stimulation, according to scientists from UCLA, who presented the findings at a recent conference.

Pollock, who has been blind since the age of 22, has used a wheelchair since his accident.

"Compared to sitting in the wheelchair, standing in the exoskeleton is incredible in itself," Pollock told Business Insider. "But standing and walking with the [spinal] stimulation is like moving from a standard vehicle into the sports version. It felt like my legs were coming alive." 

Of course, the study only involved one person, and we're still a long way from finding a cure for paralysis, experts say, because once damaged, the nervous system is very difficult to repair.

"This is really exciting," Grace Peng, a program director at the National Institute of Biomedical Imaging and Bioengineering, which funded the research, told Business Insider. But it "definitely needs a lot more data to convince people" that the therapy is effective, she said.

As this video shows, the stimulation enabled to Pollock voluntarily move his legs, as the exoskeleton provided the support needed to complete each step.

Breaking down barriers

This isn't the first obstacle Pollock has faced. When he was five years old, he lost his vision in one eye, and when he was 22, he lost it in his other eye, leaving him totally blind. But that didn't stop Pollock, an avid athlete, from going on to become the first blind person to race to the South Pole ten years later.

Then, in 2010, just weeks before his wedding, Pollock fell. The accident caused him to permanently lose all movement and feeling from the waist down.

He and his fiancée, Simone George, joined the Christopher & Dana Reeve Foundation to support research on paralysis. Through that organization, he met V. Reggie Edgerton, an exercise physiologist at UCLA who was researching treatments for spinal cord injury.

Pollock had been using an exoskeleton — a powered device that supports its wearer — built by Richmond, California-based company Ekso Bionics, and Edgerton had been working on developing a non-surgical electrical stimulation therapy for spinal cord injury. Could they combine these two approaches to get even better results, Pollock and Edgerton wondered? 

In search of a treatment

Edgerton has spent the last three decades working on treatments for paralysis, including various combinations of drugs and electrical stimulation.

In a study last year, Edgerton and his colleagues, Susan Harkema and Claudia Angeli of the University of Louisville, Kentucky, showed that four paralyzed men who'd gotten electrical implants in their spinal cords regained the ability to partially move their legs.

In July, Edgerton and colleagues did a study using a type of noninvasive spinal stimulation through the skin, showing that five men who were completely paralyzed were able to move their legs while lying down.

mark pollock rising

In the current study, he decided to give Pollock this noninvasive stimulation while Pollock was in the robotic exoskeleton. The way the suit works is by providing support while a person tries to move and completing the motions as needed.

Pollock trained for five days in the suit with the aid of electrical stimulation, and was able to take thousands of steps, the researchers said. While the stimulator was on, Pollock said he felt a sensation of "tingling" and "tension" in his legs, which haven't felt anything for years, possibly because the stimulation activated remnants of nerves near his spinal injury. He also felt improvement in other bodily functions, like increased heart rate and the ability to sweat — both signs of healthy nerve activity.

The researchers think this type of combination therapy could be used to help people with either complete or partial paralysis regain some mobility, Edgerton told Business Insider. The question is, "how much improvement can be realized with a person like this?" he said. "That, we don't know."

Meanwhile, Edgerton has started a company called NeuroRecovery Technologies to develop these stimulators commercially.

As for Pollock, the experience of having the stimulation in the exoskeleton provided a "glimmer of hope" despite his limited prospects for recovery. "But of course, at the end of the study, you have to roll out in a wheelchair with no stimulator," he said.

Still, the study adds to a growing body of research on spinal cord injury that provides some measure of optimism in a field where progress has been frustratingly slow. Pollock has a trust dedicated to the search for a cure for paralysis.

During his trip to the South Pole, Pollock followed in the footsteps of British explorer Robert Falcon Scott and Norwegian explorer Roald Amundsen. But in the past few years, he has traveled the world and met people who are explorers in another sense — scientists. "I have the same feeling as when I prepared and went to the South Pole," he said, only "in a different domain."

The study was published in the Proceedings of 37th Annual International Conference of the IEEE Engineering in Medicine and Biology Society.

Join the conversation about this story »

NOW WATCH: These bionic suits are changing the lives of people who never thought they'd walk again

This new exoskeleton helps people with paralysis move more — even climb stairs

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Researchers in Zurich, Switzerland have created a flexible exoskeleton suit to help people with severe disabilities and paralysis move freely.

Although exoskeleton suits are already available, they are often bulky and the wearer can't do much beyond walking in a straight line. This new Swiss suit helps the wearer move laterally, rotate, and even climb stairs. 

Produced by Grace Raver. Video courtesy of Reuters.

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This man lifted a 2,524 pound car using a homemade 'Iron Man' suit

This super lightweight exoskeleton could help many paraplegics walk in the near future

Scientists have developed a 'bionic spinal cord' to help paraplegics walk

These robotic suits will give workers superhuman strength

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Electronics giant Panasonic has created a robotic exoskeleton that gives the wearer superhuman strength.

Panasonic exoskeleton

Panasonic posted a video earlier this month showing three exoskeleton prototypes that can assist with heavy lifting.

Here's a closer look:

SEE ALSO: The military is 2 years away from unleashing its real-life Iron Man suit

The Panasonic Assist Suit will reduce up to 33 pounds of lower back stress when lifting heavy objects.

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It has an Auto-Assist Mechanism feature that can automatically detect when you are about to pick something heavy up to reduce stress at the perfect moment.



Workers can get the suit on themselves by stepping into its leg holes and clipping it around their waist.

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See the rest of the story at Tech Insider

I tried on a suit that simulates being an 75-year-old, and it totally changed how I view aging

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aging suit treadmill front tophalf

Three years ago, my 91-year-old grandmother spent a couple of days in May attending my college graduation in scorching heat. 

Without a peep of complaint, she walked the five long avenue blocks from Radio City Music Hall to my apartment in midtown.

Then she rode the 4 train up to Yankee Stadium in the Bronx, found her seat, watched the commencement ceremony, and rode the train back down to the restaurant where our family got lunch, before walking some more.

I gave her credit at the time, but it wasn't until a few days ago that I finally realized what an accomplishment it was.

I recently visited the Liberty Science Center in New Jersey to check out the Genworth Aging Experience, a new exhibit from Applied Minds that uses a high-tech exoskeleton to let people feel what life is like at 75 years old.

The idea behind the project, explains Bran Ferren, the company's co-founder, is to start a dialogue about the perils of aging, which largely go undiscussed.

In front of a crowd of two dozen kids and their parents, Ferren gives me tunnel vision. I'm wearing a special helmet and Oculus Rift virtual reality goggles, and the picture I see goes cloudy. I see his face, but the edges are gray. 

Next, he gives me macular degeneration — the cloudiness is now a big gray spot right in the middle of my vision. Already I'm grateful to be young and spry.

wide_bad eyes aging suitFerren next makes my ears ring. "This is tinnitus," he tells the audience, and he dials up the volume so it becomes nearly deafening. To make matters worse, he introduces loud chatter as background noise, and I'm totally disoriented. I tell the audience I would never leave the house if this was what my life was like.

Then Ferren whipped out the big guns: speech impediments and physical disabilities. 

After setting the microphone in my helmet to a slight delay, so that everything I said hit my own ears slightly later, Ferren effectively gave me dysphasia. It's a condition that causes people's coherent thoughts to come out slurred and garbled. As I happily sang along to "Mary Had A Little Lamb," thinking all was fine, the audience's laughter told me otherwise.

"You might say, 'Oh, he's faking it!'" Ferren says. "Trust me, he's not."

treadmill aging suitThe final test, a virtual walk on the beach, was by far the most eye-opening. As a pair of handlers led me onto the treadmill ("Big step, here we go") and I got to walking, the effect was immediate. I strained just to take a few steps. Ferren alerted the audience to my climbing heart rate, which had risen to 130 beats per minute. I was sweating, and according to Ferren, I'd only gone about five city blocks.

It hit me at that moment just how important an exhibit like the Genworth Aging Experience really is. For the first time in history, people 65 years and older now outnumber children 5 and younger around the world. Without a clear understanding of how the world's demographics are shifting, we can't fully prepare for the change or appreciate its effects once it happens. Stepping into a suit that mimics the real thing might spur action decades ahead of time.

Now I feel like I have a better sense of the experience of being elderly. It's not a perfect replication of what it's like, but it comes much closer — and delivers a much more visceral experience — than any statistics could. 

Now if you'll excuse me, I have a phone call to make and some very belated thanks to give.

SEE ALSO: South Korea's gender problem could lead to an existential crisis

Join the conversation about this story »

NOW WATCH: An exercise scientist reveals the best way to get the most of your workout

Spain just made an exoskeleton to help disabled children walk

These Boots Make Walking Easy Even When Carrying Heavy Loads

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These boots were made for walking (more effectively).

A new exoskeleton boot developed by Hugh Herr and his team at the MIT Media Lab could make walking a less tiring process, whether it's for a long day of city strolling, for soldiers covering harsh terrain by foot, or for helping people relearn how to walk during physical therapy. It's described in a paper in the latest issue of the Journal of NeuroEngineering and Rehabilitation.

The device consists of little more than fiberglass struts attached to boots. Small motors alternately tension and release the struts in time with your walking pace, effectively multiplying the work you put into moving. This means it takes less energy to walk, even when you are carrying extra weight.

Here's what it looks like in action:

May 07, 2014 10:09

The researchers had test subjects walk on a treadmill while wearing a 50-pound weighted vest. Researchers recorded how much oxygen the subjects inhaled and how much carbon dioxide they exhaled in order to establish a metabolic rate, a measure of the energy the person used to move while wearing the vest.

Then the experiment was repeated with the subjects wearing both the vest and the exoskeleton, and the results showed that the exoskeleton drastically reduced the energy required to walk while carrying a load. The 50-pound vest actually felt like 35 pounds when subjects were wearing the boots, because they bore 30% of the load.

"This is the first exoskeleton that actually augments human walking and significantly reduces metabolic cost," Herr said in a press release. "Subjects noticed that their legs felt heavier and awkward when they took the exoskeleton off."

This means that the exoskeleton can make it easier to carry things you already carry, or it can enable you to carry heavier things using the same amount of energy. 

The exoskeleton detects when to jump into action — you just need to walk normally in order to get its benefits. If you stand still, there is tension between the struts and the motor worn below the knee. Take a step and the motor pulls the top of the struts forward. This torques the bottom outward, and as the bottom is fixed to the boots, that's where you get the benefit of the device's assistance.

exoskeleton diagram

SEE ALSO: Brain Implants Could Give People Night Vision & An Excellent Memory

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A Robotic Suit Made It Possible For A Paralyzed Man To Kick Off The World Cup

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Walk Again Project

Brazil's victory in the World Cup opener against Croatia Thursday paled in comparison to one man's triumph at the Corinthians Arena in Sao Paulo.

Juliano Pinto, a paraplegic 29-year-old, miraculously kicked off the World Cup thanks to a robotic suit that moved his leg and enabled the kick.

Pinto's robot suit was backed by Walk Again Project, an international collaboration between more than 150 researchers at a number of different universities. Neuroscientist Miguel Nicolelis of Duke University Medical Center led the construction of the suit, which functions off electrodes under a cap that transmit signals from the brain to the exoskeleton, translating those signals into movements like steps and kicks.

The suit also contains LED sensors and an artificial "skin" of circuit boards, which send feedback to Pinto to help him guide the robotic legs.

"The basic idea is that we are recording from the brain and then that signal is being translated into commands for the robot to start moving," Dr. Gordon Cheng, a member of the Walk Again team, told the BBC.

In its current state, the robot suit is pretty bulky and is in the early stages of existence, but the hope is that one day the suit will be lightweight and accessible enough to actually serve paralyzed people in their everyday life.

According to a press release from Walk Again, Pinto's kick "is only the beginning of a future in which the robotic garment will evolve to the point of becoming accessible and enabling anyone with paralysis to walk freely. And the World Cup will be a milestone to show the world that the project is moving in that direction."

Watch Pinto complete the kick:

Nicolelis has a clearer video on his Facebook page showing how the suit works. You can follow Walk Again on its Facebook page to keep up to date with the project.

SEE ALSO: A Thought-Controlled Robotic Suit That Enables Paralyzed People To Walk Will Debut At The World Cup

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The Human Exoskeleton Got The FDA Go-Ahead To Help Paraplegics Walk

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ReWalk Exoskeleton

After more than a decade of research and development, an Israeli company has finally gotten approval from the FDA to market its human exoskeleton, a robotic suit that makes it possible for paralyzed individuals to walk.

In 1997, Dr. Amit Goffer became quadriplegic after an ATV accident, and he was inspired to create a solution for others like him. He decided to start Argo Medical Technologies (now known as ReWalk Robotics), and 11 years later, Goffer's dream was realized in the form of the ReWalk.

In 2012, the ReWalk Personal — an exoskeleton designed for everyday life — became available in Europe, and as of yesterday, the robosuit will be able to be marketed in the U.S.

ReWalk is made up of a metal brace that supports the legs and upper body; motors that make the hips, knees, and ankles move; a tilt sensor that detects motion; and a backpack that powers the whole suit.

A wireless remote control on the wrist lets the user command ReWalk to stand up, sit down, or walk. But because of the tilt sensor, the exoskeleton will also function automatically based off the wearer's movements. So if someone leans forward while sitting, the exoskeleton will bring them to stand. ReWalk's movements are designed to mirror the regular pattern of walking, so the foot will hit the ground with the heel first, toes second.

ReWalk-wearers can use crutches on top of the suit for additional stability. And anyone who uses ReWalk will also have to go through some training in a rehab center to learn how to control it.

Right now, the exoskeleton is priced at $69,500, but ReWalk Robotics CEO Larry Jasinski estimates it will actually save insurance companies money if you factor in the medication and issues that are avoided by using ReWalk. And now that it's received the go-ahead from the FDA, doctors can view the exoskeleton as a serious alternative to wheelchairs.

The implications of the FDA's approval are huge for American paraplegics. According to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention there are about 200,000 people in the U.S. with a spinal cord injury. ReWalk will give them the opportunity to be completely independent and self-sufficient for the first time.

"You very likely will see someone walking on the streets in Boston in not too long," Jasinski told Business Insider. "The exoskeleton is not a fantasy in a movie anymore, it’s real. The FDA put us through a rigorous process but an appropriate one, and they validated that this is a legitimate new category that is appropriate for everyday use."

Next up for ReWalk is a solution for quadriplegics, according to Jasinski.

"The industry of exoskeletons is something that is an industry to watch because I think it can offer a lot of benefits to people whether they’re the elderly, people with injuries or sickness," he said. "You’re going to see robotics, exoskeletons as a pretty good part of our future life."

Watch the ReWalk Personal in action:

One ReWalker takes a stroll in the streets.

ReWalk

Another crosses the finish line of a 10k race in 5 hours.

ReWalk exoskeleton

SEE ALSO: A Robotic Suit Made It Possible For A Paralyzed Man To Kick Off The World Cup

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The Military Is Closing In On Powerful Exoskeleton Technology

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Raytheon XOS Exoskeleton

For decades, the U.S. military and its private-sector partners have been working toward a technology straight out of science fiction: robotic suits.

And it's no surprise. Exoskeletons could add to soldiers' natural strength, letting troops lift seemingly impossible loads and dart across the battlefield at incredible speed. 

Currently, the military is exploring creating an Iron Man-like specialized suit through the Tactical Assault Light Operator Suit (TALOS) program. The suit would provide soldiers with enhanced mobility and protection, and it would most likely run on top of an exoskeleton base.   

Today's exoskeletons vary in utility, but they can allow soldiers to carry 17 times more weight than normal and march with significantly less strain on the body. With an XOS 2 suit, for example, a solider can carry 400 pounds but feel the weight of only 23.5.

Although robotic exoskeleton suits have been in development for over 50 years, things really started picking up speed in the 1990s, leading to more and more interest from the U.S military. Now, it's a clear priority.

As former Air Force Chief of Staff General John Jumper said: "We must give the individual soldier the same capabilities of stealth and standoff that fighter planes have. We must look at the soldier as the system.”

Early 1960s: The Man Amplifier

Throughout the early 1960s, Neil Mizen developed the early stages of the Man Amplifier at Cornell University's Aeronautical Lab. The suit was intended to have powered gears at the joints to provide additional support and strength.

Although it was hoped that the Amplifier would have military and scientific uses, Mizen could not master the system's powered gear system, and the suit was never completed. Even so, his research went on to inspire future exoskeleton projects. 



1965: The Hardiman Suit

One of the first powered iterations of exoskeletons was General Electric's 1965 Hardiman Suit, which was co-developed with the U.S. military. The suit built upon the research done for the Man Amplifier.

The Hardiman was intended to lift 1,500 pounds; however, the suit never managed to act as a fully unified machine, and controlling it proved impossible. 

Instead, research was focused on one arm of the suit. The arm managed to lift 750 pounds, but it weighed three quarters of a ton alone. The suit was deemed impractical, and the project was eventually abandoned.



1997: The Hybrid Assistive Limb (HAL)

In 1997, the Japanese research firm Cyberdyne started the earliest prototype of the Hybrid Assistive Limb (HAL). The South Korean and U.S. militaries offered to fund the program, but the company wanted to avoid military applications for its technology.

The first prototypes of HAL were created at Tsukuba University with the aim of assisting the disabled and elderly with their daily tasks. The original HAL systems were attached to computers, and the batteries alone weighed 49 pounds. 



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

Introducing The ‘Chairless Chair,’ An Exoskeleton That Lets You Sit Anywhere

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Chairless Chair exoskeleton

Production line workers are often required to stand for a majority of their shift, and that's something that Zurich-based startup Noonee is looking to change.

Noonee's solution is a futuristic exoskeleton that's simply called the "Chairless Chair."

The Chairless Chair is a wearable exoskeleton that can lock into place, providing support for production line workers all while retaining mobility.

The device's frame is constructed of aluminum and carbon fiber, and weighs only two kilograms when strapped to a user's waist and thighs. According to CNN, you can walk and even run while wearing the contraption, and a simple touch of a button causes a variable damper to stiffen the device, allowing support for various configurations.

One version of the Chairless Chair features boots that are connected to the device, preventing the need for the frame to ever touch the ground. Another version doesn't require any special footwear, but the frame does touch the ground when the stiffening mechanism is engaged.

While the Chairless Chair is primarily focused on limiting fatigue for production line workers, it's easy to see how the mobile exoskeleton could see application in other industries with back-breaking work such as farming.

The Chairless Chair is scheduled to enter trials with BMW and Audi this year, and you can learn more over at Noonee's official website.

SEE ALSO: NimbleTV Lets You Watch Your TV From Anywhere In The World — And Now It's Free

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The US military's 'Iron Man suit' could become a reality if these key problems are solved

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Iron Man Talos Suit

Special Operations Command in 2013 introduced the world to its tactical assault light operator suit concept via a widely disseminated YouTube animated video of a hulking human figure bursting through a door as bullets pinged off its metallic skin.

The press immediately dubbed it the “Iron Man suit.”

Then SOCOM leader Navy Adm. William McRaven said the program’s goal was to protect commandos entering buildings during raids. The command had recently lost a special operator in just such a circumstance, and the TALOS system would bring a measure of safety for those busting though doors where an armed insurgent may be in waiting.

He managed to have $80 million over four years allocated toward the effort and gave technologists until 2018 to deliver a working prototype.

There are doubters. Now retired Sen. Tom Coburn, R-Okla., in 2014 put TALOS on his annual Wastebook list of government boondoggles, saying experts he had consulted claimed it couldn’t be done. On the same list were studies of gambling monkeys, mountain lions on treadmills and the Missile Defense Agency’s low success rate shooting down missiles with other missiles.

“Though it’s in its beginning stages, some estimate it could run way over budget, without ever achieving any results …other than looking cool,” Coburn wrote.

SOCOM technologists and senior leaders admit that there are hurdles to overcome, while at the same time express optimism that the project will deliver the protection that its most vulnerable operators require.

The program is progressing as planned, but “many significant challenges remain,” Army Gen. Joseph Votel, SOCOM commander, said at the National Defense Industrial Association Special Operations/Low Intensity Conflict conference in Washington, DC. He said the suit was still “on track.”

Raytheon XOS ExoskeletonPowering the suit, allowing the operator freedom of movement and view screens that don’t have latency issues are three of the main challenges, said Anthony Davis, director of science and technology at SOCOM.

Today, with front and back plates, plus a helmet, less than 20 percent of an individual is protected, Davis noted. State-of-the-art body armor weighs between eight to 12 pounds per square foot. One hundred percent coverage of an operator would require 500 to 600 pounds of armor. The program will have to look at how the armor is distributed, carried and supported, he said.

“A lot of work needs to be done on control theory and how we control those actuators and how they will enable the suits,” he said.

Controlling and lifting all that armor will require a lot of energy, he added.

Davis said an exoskeleton will require three to five kilowatts of power for a 10- to 12-hour operation. “Currently, there is nothing available man-packable that can provide that kind of power source,” he said.

SOCOM’s three main challenges in fielding the suit will be “power, power and power,” said Peter W. Singer, strategist and senior fellow at the New America Foundation, and author of several books about military technology and robotics.

“It’s not going to be unsolvable. It’s just going to be a huge challenge and one of the key limitations for various exoskeleton programs,” said Singer in an interview.

HULC ExoskeletonThe armor will have to hang off some kind of exoskeleton, which would serve as a frame for the body armor. Several companies have been developing this technology, which has the promise of boosting the strength and endurance of those who wear it.

Singer said there have been several proposals put forth for portable battlefield energy on such systems. Solar is one. Another is kinetic energy, or using the body’s movements to generate electricity. Unfortunately, the numbers don’t add up for what SOCOM wants. They are still in low percentages, he said.

“Power seems to be the really big [challenge]. But it’s not just SOCOM that’s interested. It’s every smartphone maker. Everybody wants to figure out how to crack this” problem, he said.

The program’s first year saw the delivery of a “passive” exoskeleton, or one that is not powered. This year, the program is moving on to powered exoskeletons. SOCOM so far has issued three contracts for three different powered prototypes to be delivered this year, Davis said.

James F. Geurts, SOCOM acquisition executive, said these prototypes are helping researchers understand how the human body performs, and where the system can provide assistance to the operators.

Powering them will be key to making them practical, he suggested.

“Quite frankly, [they are] creating an exercise machine because you’re causing more work,” he said.

SOCOM officials at the conference suggested that the suit may not be for an entire A-team, but rather for the first operator through the door. He is the most vulnerable to small arms fire. Since these scenarios only take a few minutes, the question is whether 10 to 12 hours of energy is truly needed.

Singer said: “We don’t yet frankly know what will be the uses and how they will evolve once [the suits] get in the hands of actual users.”TALOS concept

Military history is rife with examples of one soldier in a unit being given a special piece of equipment, he said. Soon enough, others are asking why they can’t have the same. As for the suit only being needed for short intervals: “I don’t want to be really well protected for 25 minutes and then have to strip it off and have nothing,” he said.

The TALOS program has energized the small community of research laboratories and companies that are developing exoskeletons, Singer said. The most mature part of the technology is industrial applications. In that case, the man/machine hybrid can be tethered to a power source, he noted. The least mature part of the technology is what SOCOM is setting out to accomplish, namely exoskeletons for field operations.

Lockheed Martin has developed systems for both applications. The HULC exoskeleton, which was intended to help troops carry heavy loads, but did not support body armor, was last tested by the Army in 2011, but was not fielded. It could assist soldiers for up to 20 kilometers on one charge, company literature stated.

Of late, the company has focused on its industrial exoskeleton, FORTIS, an unpowered, lightweight system. The US Navy has purchased two FORTIS exoskeletons for use in ship repair and maintenance operations at its shipyards. FORTIS is also in use on the Lockheed Martin Aeronautics C-130J production line in Marietta, Georgia, and is being evaluated for use at other Lockheed Martin facilities and companies.

It enhances an operator’s strength and endurance by transferring the weight of heavy hand tools or other loads through the exoskeleton, said Trish Aelker, Lockheed Martin exoskeleton program manager.

She too said power will be a huge obstacle for using the technology in the field.

“There is no power generation technology or hybrid system that is man portable, sufficiently power dense and extensible enough over a widely changing mission profile that can meet the demands of a combat exoskeleton as it is presently envisioned,” she said. “For the foreseeable future, power generation/storage and management will impose a limitation on the size, weight, functionality, duration and application of exoskeleton technologies for combat operations.”

Lockheed Martin is not participating in the TALOS program. Other companies participating in the exoskeleton portion of the TALOS program declined to be interviewed.

Aelker was skeptical that SOCOM could field a fully protective suit that could stop all the munitions that a special operator might encounter, and have the agility and protection required.

“Exoskeletons cannot suspend the laws of physics,” she said.

“Exoskeleton weight impacts agility and power consumption, and imposes operational limitations on the way a system can be fielded,” she added.

“Exoskeletons consume power based on a wide variety of factors having to do with what function they are performing in operation and how much they weigh. For instance, running consumes more energy than standing still, and a heavier exoskeleton will consume more energy to move than a lighter exoskeleton. The power hurdle is particularly challenging because missions that are only expected to last minutes or hours can sometimes extend for days,” she said.HULC exoskeleton

A 500-pound armored exoskeleton may stop a 7.62 mm armor-piercing bullet, but is not agile enough to operate in mountainous, littoral or riverine environments, she said. And while a 500-pound exoskeleton can stop the penetration of a 7.62 mm bullet, that same armor cannot protect the soldier from a rocket-propelled grenade, larger caliber munitions or improvised explosive devices, she noted.

Davis said there were two other hurdles SOCOM is hoping to overcome by its self-imposed 2018 deadline. One is actuation, or freedom of movement, and the other is latency with goggles.

“The third through fifth years of TALOS are the ones that have the even tougher technological challenges,” Davis said.

SOCOM officials said from the beginning that in order to put the technology into the field as soon as possible, the program was forgoing traditional acquisition practices, and reaching out to labs and private companies that don’t normally work with the military.

SOCOM has a staff of almost 30 working full time on the TALOS project, Davis said. Twelve of them are Army and Navy special operators who have recently returned from battlefields. Their instant feedback is speeding up the development cycle, he said.

The program is already seeing spin-out products emerging from the effort, Geurts said.

The three main hurdles: power, actuation and image latency, will all have challenge prizes, Davis said. Such prizes are open to any person or team that can come forward with a solution to a problem. One prize on latency was already held. Another on power was slated to begin in March, but by the end of the month, no details had been released. A second on actuator controls was slated for June. Davis said SOCOM has $1 million in total prize money to award.

SOCOM spokesman Capt. Kevin Aandahl said in April that the command is scrapping its own dedicated power challenge prize, and handing that effort over to an ongoing Department of Energy R&D program. The schedule for the remaining challenge prize competitions has not been firmed up yet, but the next may come in May or June, he said. He declined to make TALOS managers available for interviews.

Singer said the digital image latency issue is probably solvable. That is a problem being worked on in the entertainment industry. There are solutions in the pipeline, although they are probably a few years away, he added. One involves directly beaming lasers of images into the retina. “You are experiencing it as if you’re actually seeing it,” he said.

As for actuators, there are ongoing efforts that may lead to a flexible suit, especially in the realm of 3D printing.

“You could not only make the suits lighter and more flexible. You could tailor them to the individual so you don’t have to have a one-size-fits-all suit,” he said.

That may be important. As any journalist who has embedded with an A-team can attest, special operators come in all shapes and sizes.

Singer was reluctant to say that TALOS was a technological bridge too far for SOCOM. The history of scientific advancement is rife with skeptics who said, “It can never be done,” and were in short order proven to be wrong, he noted.

Nevertheless, his best guess was that this will be a longer-term project.

“Between the vision of the Iron Man suit and the Pentagon’s track record for acquisition, I don’t think they will make it by 2018,” he predicted.

SEE ALSO: The military is closing in on powerful exoskeleton technology

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These high schoolers built an Iron Man-inspired 'exosuit' that can lift 400 pounds

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AJAX Exosuit

"Ian, can you normally lift 50 pounds with your pinky?" asked Gabriel Perko-Engle.

Ian Simons, like most humans, can't.

Strapped into the robot-like "exosuit" he helped build though, Simons is capable of super-human powers. By pushing a joystick with his pinky, Simons moves the suit's arm and effortlessly lifts a 50-pound weight.

The AJAX Exosuit, short for Amplified Juggernaut Assistance Exoskeleton, was assembled by eight high-schoolers and inspired by movies the teens had watched, like Iron Man, The Edge of Tomorrow and Elysium.

It's not an exosuit that could be used for disabilities since it responds to physical movements, but it could have military and commercial applications since it can hold up to 400 pounds.

AJAX exosuit

The high-schoolers from the Bay School of San Francisco, though, saw it not as a business but as a fun weekend project to prepare for the Maker Faire, an annual California gathering of makers and tinkerers.

Joseph DeRose had made projects with his family for the Faire before, including a flight simulator from Battlestar Galactica and an eight-foot tall animatronic fire-breathing dragon

The exosuit, though, was his most ambitious and hardest project so he recruited his friends. The group assembled on the weekends as part of the Young Makers program and raised money on Kickstarter and through sponsors to assemble their exosuit.

AJAX exosuit

The project was moving smoothly with each teen focusing on his specialty, until they turned it on a month before Maker Faire and had the "oh-no" moment every maker dreads. 

"Right after this thing was fully completed, we realized it wasn't working," Perko-Engel said.

Fixing the problem is worse than painstakingly troubleshooting faulty Christmas tree lights, the teens explained. Instead of just removing each bulb, the process is more like removing and re-creating each bulb until they figured out each issue.

Now, the suit responds to a person moving their legs or tapping the joystick arms up and down.

"You're in it and it just feels really good," Cole Yarbrough said.

AJAX exosuit

The last hurdle is smoothing out how to walk in the exosuit.

When humans walk, they shift weight from side to side as they lift their feet off the ground. The exosuit can't adjust side to side though, so the walking is a bit jilted right now and the group hasn't done many walks outside of the carrier.

A few of the teens will keep working on designing the proper feet for it though. When asked what's next, they joked, "maybe recreating the Thriller video?"

AJAX exosuit

 

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The Army is making robot arm braces to help soldiers shoot with deadly accuracy

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army exoskeleton arm

The US Army is developing a robot exoskeleton that fits on to a soldier's arm in order to help them improve their handgun shooting accuracy on the battlefield.

Many Hollywood movies portray Americans as favouring a "just keep shooting" heavy-handed style of marksmanship, where the volume of guns and ammunition is proportionally effective in getting the job done.

Practice does make perfect, but now the US Army wants to be able to train new recruits to pick up basic shooting proficiency much faster, saving in ammunition costs. As a result, the US Army Research Laboratory (ARL) is now developing a tool to help.

The mechatronic arm exoskeleton MAXFAS is aiming to remove arm tremors that occur when a person holds a gun at arm's length, which greatly affect shooting accuracy and vary depending on the person's physical condition.

"Soldiers need to be able to aim and shoot accurately and quickly in the chaos of the battlefield," ARL mechanical engineer Dan Baechle said.

"Training with MAXFAS could improve soldiers' accuracy, and reduce current time and ammunition requirements in basic training."

How the robot exoskeleton works

The exoskeleton is inspired by a robotic device that is used at the University of Delaware to help train the arm motions of stroke victims, and the device is made from carbon fibre, which is prized for its lightweight properties.

Motors for the arm exoskeleton device are mounted behind the soldier, and these operate and pull on cables that are attached to carbon fibre arm braces wrapped around the arm.

Sensors within the braces react when they detect involuntary tremors in the arm, sending signals to the motors to correct the soldier's aim.

So far, trials of the device have shown that soldiers wearing the MAXFAS have reduced tremors in their arms, and this effect continued even after they took the device off.

Baechle admits that he has been fascinated with robot exoskeletons since he first saw the Caterpillar P-5000 Power Loader exoskeleton suit in the 1986 Sigourney Weaver film Aliens. However, the US Army is not yet close to being able to create exoskeletons like the ones seen in the more recent Iron Man films.

"My vision is that one day, a more mature version of MAXFAS could be used to improve aim on the battlefield despite any adverse conditions," he said.

"In science, we are making great progress toward making science fiction a reality."

SEE ALSO: The military is closing in on powerful exoskeleton technology

NOW READ: Japan’s population is so old that elderly workers are getting robot exoskeletons so they never have to retire

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‘Ironman’-like robotic suits could give workers super strength and help them lift heavy objects

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activelink exoskeleton

Move over, Tony Stark — factory workers may soon be wearing robotic suits that help them lift and carry heavy objects.

Electronics giant Panasonic recently announced it will begin selling these "exoskeletons," which were developed in collaboration with the company ActiveLink, MIT Technology Review reported.

"We expect that exoskeletons, or power-assist suits, will be widely used in people's lives in 15 years," said Panasonic spokesperson Mio Yamanaka, who is based in Osaka, Japan, as quoted by Tech Review.

The suit, which weighs just over 13 pounds and attaches to the back, thighs, and feet, allows its wearer to carry an additional 33 pounds. The device has undergone testing with warehouse handlers in Osaka, and is being tested now by forestry workers.

Powered exoskeletons, wearable mechanical frames powered by a system of motors, are increasingly making their way into the market, from helping people with lower limb disabilities walk again, to outfitting troops with armor that gives them super strength and perception. Now, these devices are starting to play a role in manual labor, too. And they could be especially helpful for older workers.

The Panasonic suit contains force sensors that detect when the wearer is trying to lift or carry a heavy object, and a lightweight carbon-fiber motor that amplifies their motions and gives their muscles extra oomph. The company is also testing a much larger suit that could help workers carry up to 220 pounds, according to Tech Review.

activelink exoskeleton

Panasonic isn't the only company working on exoskeletons for industrial use. Cyberdyne, another Japanese company, sells suits that use nerve signals to detect how the wearer aims to move before applying force to assist with the movement. Cyberdyne recently partnered with Tokyo's Haneda Airport to provide it with exoskeletons that can help airport staff schlep heavy luggage.

Meanwhile, Ekso Bionics, headquartered in Richmond, California, is developing an industrial exoskeleton that helps the wearer lift heavy power tools. Ekso also has a suit designed to help people with weakness in their lower extremities stand up and walk naturally. In addition, the US military has contracted Ekso to develop its armored TALOS exoskeleton to protect soldiers on the battlefield.

The ReWalk exoskeleton, from a company called ReWalk Robotics, has produced the first powered exoskeleton to be approved by the FDA. The device helps people with spinal cord injuries that affect their lower limbs stand upright, walk, and even, in some cases, climb stairs.

SEE ALSO: Japan’s population is so old that elderly workers are getting robot exoskeletons so they never have to retire

SEE ALSO: The military is closing in on powerful exoskeleton technology

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This new exoskeleton helps people with paralysis move more — even climb stairs

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Researchers in Zurich, Switzerland have created a flexible exoskeleton suit to help people with severe disabilities and paralysis move freely.

Although exoskeleton suits are already available, they are often bulky and the wearer can't do much beyond walking in a straight line. This new Swiss suit helps the wearer move laterally, rotate, and even climb stairs. 

Produced by Grace Raver. Video courtesy of Reuters.

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